OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1901 TIME TABLES ELECTRIC CARS 25o or 450 Round Trip BOATS Bound Trip 25o i.eavi leave ore. city Portland 7 00 B.m. Tayjor St. 10 00 8 30 a.m. 130 p.m. 1130 4 30 8 00 p.m. 8 00 Sat. 6 15 LEAVE , OREGON CITY 7:05 A. M. 8:ar) 9:20 -10:05 10:50 11:35 12:20 P. M. 1:05 LEAVE POItTLAHD "7:00 A.M. 7 45 880 9 15 10 00 10 45 1130" SUNDAY 9 30 1100 1 00 2J30 4(0 5 30 700 800 9 30 1100 100 230 400 5 80 700 l!i:15P.M. 1:00 1:50 1:45 2:35 8:20 4:05 4:60 6:85 6:20 7:05 7:60) 8:20 9:15 10:30 11:40 2:30 3:15 4:00 4:45 5:30 6:15 7:00 7:45 8:30 9:15 10:30 WILLAMETTE . FALLS CARS Leave 8. Bridge 6:46 7:30 8:15 9:30 11:00 12:10 12:45 1:15 2:15 . 4:00 6:00 6:45 Q 6:15 a S;45 J 7:16 t 8:15 3 9:00 J5 10:00 g Leave Wil. Falls 6:30 7:00 7:45 8:30 9:45 11:15 12:25 1:00 1 :30 2:30 4:15 5:15 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:30 9:45 Only to Milwaukee 12:50 Sat. only 11:40 SUNDAY Round Trip Ours Every Hulf Hour R. R. TRAINS 25o or 45o Round Trip LEAVE LEAVE OREGON CITY PORTLAND 7:00 A.M. 8:30 A.M. 9:22 A. M. 4:00 P.M. 6:30 P. M. 8:30 P. M. The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co 's Strs. Regulator & Dalles City Dally (exoept Sunday) between The Dalles, Hood R'iver, Cascade Locks, Vancouver and Portland Touching at way points on both sides of the Columbia river. Both of tie above Btcamtrs have been i k 11 and are In excellent shape for the season oil 00 The Kffiulutor Line will endeavor to giveits patrons the best service possible. For Comfort,' Economy and . Pleasure travel by the steamers of The Regulator Line. The above steamers leave Portland 7a. m. and Dalles at 8 a. m.,and arrive at destinationln ample time for outgoing trains. Portland Office, The Dalles Office Oak St. Dock. Court Street. A. C. AI.LA1VAV General Agent Best of Everything . In a vrrrl this tells of the pnwi'iiger servioe via,. THE NORTH-WESTERN LINE 8 trains dally between St. Paul and Chicago, comprising: -The I-iitct Pullmnn Sleepers Peerless Dining Cars Library and Observation Cars Free , Reclining Chair Cars The 20th Century Train "T4te North-Western Limited," runs every day of the year. The Finest Train in the World Electric Lighted. Steam Heated To Chicago by Daylight. The Badger State Express, the finest day train running between inicago via. the Short Line. Connections from the west made via The Northern Pacific, Great Northern, and Caiadian Pacific Rys This is also one of the best lines between Omaha, St. Paul and Minneapolis All agents sell tickets via "The North western Line." W. H. MEAD, . H. S. SISLER. G. A. T. A. 948 Alder St., Portland, Oregon. E. E. G. SEOL Will give you a Bargain in Wall Paper Wall Tinting and in General House Painting Paint Shop near Depot Hotel ! Swedish Asthma Cure ABSOLUTELY CURES Asthma I Hay Fever t T 1 t T f-f- Droncmai i rouDie GUARANTEED NO OPIATES I For Sale by C. G. HUNTLEY Oregon City, Oregon 1 X THE PEOPLE'S PRESS Official Oreau of the Socialist Party of Oregon. A fearless exponent of scientific gov ernment, as taught by the most advanc ed thinkers and philosophers ol this age. $15,000 cash to distribute among sub scribers, who subscribe soon. You can set sample copy free if you mention this paper A. D. HALE, Editor, vy Albany, Ore. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of law approved Febrary 23rd, 1901, providing for the saie "of lands which Clackamas county has bid in for delin quent taxes and acquired title thereto and in compliance with the commands of said law I will on Saturday, the 14th day of September, 1901, at the front door of the county court house in the city of Oregon City, Clackamas county, Oregon, beginning at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, sell at public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash in hand on the day of sale, all of such prop erty to which said Clackamas ounty has acquired title in accordance with said law. J. J. Cookk,' Sheriff of Clackamas County, Or. Dated this 8th day July, 1901. SUMMONS. In the circuit court of the state of Ore gon for the county of Clackamas- ss: Ida M Young, plaintiff, vs. Charles O. Young, defendant. In the name of the State of Oregon you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 6th day of September, 1901, that be ing the time prescribed in the order of (he publication of this summons; and if you fail to appear and answer said com plaint, the plaintiff will apply to the court lor the reliet therein prayed for, to-wit: A decree of divorce from the bonds of matrimony now existing be tween you and the plaintiff, and that said bonds be forever dissolved, and the guardianship of the minor child named in said complaint. This summons is published by order of the above entitled court, made and entered tbe 17th day of July, 1901, and the date of lirst publication is Friday, August 2, 1901, and the said publica tion is to run six consecutive weeks from the said date, M . J. MacMahon, Attorney for Plaintiff. Dated. Oregon City, July 26, 1901. SUMMONS. In the circuit court cf the slate of Ore gon, for Clackamas county. flattie Claik, plaintiff, vs. George Clark, defendant. To George1 Clark, the above named de fendant : In the name of the state of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled court and cause on or before the fourth day of October,1901, which is six weeks after August 23,1901, the date ordered for the first p lblication of this notice, and if you fail to so appear and answer the plaintiff will apply for the relief prayed for in her complaint, to-wit: for a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony now existing between the above named plaintiff aid defendant; and for su h other and ftnther relief as to the court seems meet and juet. This summons is publi -I ed by order Of the Hon. T, A. McBride, judge of the above named court, made and entered on the 21st day of August, 1901. M. J. MacMahon, Attorney foi Plaint'ff. Dated Oregon City, Aug'.-t 21, l'JOl. OREGON SALEM September 23-28, 1901 Great Agricultural AND Industrial Fair- BIG LIVESTOCK SHOW Cood Racing the in Afternoons Latest Attractions In New Auditorium BulldJniff Every Evening, With Good Music Special Bates on Campers' Tickets Beautiful Camp Grounds Free Come and Bring Your Families Reduced Rates On All Railroads For Further Particulars, Address M. D. "WISDOM, Sec, Portland, Ore. For Sale or Trade Entire stock of furniture, tin- ware, stoves stock ranch graniteware, hardware, and fixtures. Will take or Eastern Oregon stock in exchange for whole or part. i Call on or address, , G. H. YOUNG, Box 358. Oregon City, Oregon. WANTED. Capable, reliable pemon Id every county to represent lrg company of solid fi nancial reputation; salary per year, payable weeltly;3perdsy absolutely aur and all ex penses; straight, bona flde, definite salary, no commission ; salary paid each Saturday and ex pense money advanced each veek. STANDARD BOUSE, 334 I)iaboe St., Chicaco. State Fair The Excise Made by many a man for taking a drink at the bar is that he needs a bracer. lie feel9 weak, his stomach is "out of sorts" and liquor makes him feel good." The trrea man wno sits on a pin leaps up with new energy, but no one would say that this energy was evi dence of the strength giving power of a pin. So with the en ergy induced by liquors. They only spur the body on, but do not strengthen it. Strength is made from food prop erly digested and assimilated. When the stom ach is diseased there is a failure to extract the nutrition from food and the body grows weak. The weak body needs strengthening, not stimulating. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition, so that the nutrition of food is perfectly ex tracted and assimilated and the body nourished into health and strength. There is no alcohol in Golden Medical Discovery," and it is entirely free from opium, cocaine and all other narcotics. Accept no substitute for Golden Med ical Discovery." There is no other medi cine "just as good" for diseases of the stomach and allied organs. "Your 'Golden Medical Discovery' and Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy have been of preat benefit to me." writes (Prof.) Pleasant A. Oliver, of Viola, Fulton Co., Ark. Hefore I used the above mentioned remedies my sleep was not sound : digestion bad ; a continual feeling of misery. I now feel like a new man." Dr. Tierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate the bowels and liver. Question .Answered. Yes, AuguBt Flower still has the largest sale of any medicine in the civ ilized world. Your mothers and grand moihers never thought of using any thing else for Indigestion or Biliousness. Doctors were ecarce, and they seldom heard of Appendicitis, Nervous Prostra tion or Heart Failure, etc. They used August Flower to clean out the systetri and stop fermentation of undigested food, regulate the action of the liver, stimulate the nervous and organic action of the system, and that is all they took when feeling dull and bad' wilh headacheaand other aches. " Yc u only need a few doseB of Green's August Flower, in liquid form, to make you sat isfied there is nothing serious the matter with you.' Get Green's Prize Almanac at Geore A. Harding's. : . . Why drink rot-gut, when you can aet Sagamore hind-made sour mash at Kelly & Noblitt's.;. . - Astounded the Editor. Editor S. A. Brown, of BennetteviUo S. U., was once immensely surprised. "Through lung suffering from dyspep sia." he w ites, "mv wife was greatly run down. She had no strength or vigor and mltercd great distress mm her ttouiach, hut she tried Electric Bet ters which helped her at once, and, alter using tour hollies, he is entirely well, can eatanyth n. li s a grand tonic, and its gen le lnxtive qualities are splendid for tot p,U liver,". For Indiges tion, Loss of Appetite, Stomach and Liver troubles it's a positive, guaranteed cure. (July ouc at George A. uaraing s The Red Cross order will give a picnic at Mngone's park on Saturday, Aug. 24. BUI 8 Wanted. The Board of Water Commissioners of Oregon City, Oregon, aeks for sealed bids, for the construction of the con crete foundation and clear water well for the Filter Plant, of the City Water Work. Approximate quantity about 400 cubic yards. The work to begin upon the o mple'irm ot the present ex cavation and be completed in two weeks' time. Bids will be received until one o'clock, p. in., on Saturday, August 24th, 1901. The Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids. A certified check must accompany ihe bid, equal to 10 per cent ol the amount ol the contract, as i 'un dated damages in cape the successful bidder fails to enter into a contract and give a good bond lor the faithful per formance of thecontrac'. Plans and specifications can be seen at the othctrof the secretary. Address, T. L. ClIAKMAN, See, ... BrarJ ot Water Commissioners, Ciiarman Bros.' Blk. Oregon City, Or, Mark, Bid for Foundation. August 15th, 1901. To Save Her Child From frightful disfigurement Mrs. Nannie Galh-ger, of La Grange, Ga., ap plied Burklen'H Arnica Salve t ) great sores on her head and face, and writes its quick cure exceedtd all her hopes. It wr'iM wondjrj in r-oren, Bruises, Skin Eruptions, Cotn, Burns, Scaldf and I'ih'S. 2-ri: Cure guaranteed by Geo. A. Harding, Dniiiiiist. WAX 'yv!" Don't tie the top cf your telly and preserve Jars in the old fashioned way. ISeul them by me new, quica, absolutely sure wuyuy a thin coating orpnre, reUned I'ararline Wax. lias no taste or odor. Is air tleht and acid proof. Easily applied. Useful In a dozen other ways about the bouse. Full directions with each pound cake. Sold ererrwfaers. Mad by STANDARD OIL CO- 1 i 1 IF mm I NEWS OF Friday, August 16. The Austrian government will spend $20,000,000 on tbe harbor of Trieste in order to obtain control of "part of the Mediterranean trade now going to Mar seilles. F.A. Heinze, who won'the $10,000,000 suit of the Amalgamated Copper Co. he is the company, mostly has sued R. G.Salomon, a wealthy Newark leather; merchant, for the recovery of his Pana ma hat. A great storm has temporarily cut off Mobile, Ala., from the rest of the world. Three new torpedo-boat destroyers were launched at Baltimore. I London fruit dealers advise Oregon orchardists to raise Yellow Newton ap ples. The Eastern demand for Hood Kiver apples is greater than the supply . Victor Peterson fell into the Colum bia from the steamer Regulator and was drowned. The big stenmer Tyr will load at Port land for Vladivostock. The Umatilla wheat crop will be lar ger than last year. One furnace of the Northport, B. C, smelter closed down because a batch of nonunion men walked out who wanted a day. Mr. Menzies. a San Francisco mer chant, attempted to bribe the Port Costa longshoremen with the otter ot f 10,UUU or more to reiurn to work. At McKeesport, Pa., 300 tube workeis joined the strikers. In New York city, 30,000 Vgirls em ployed in making bargain-counter wo men's wear, will strike for better pay and shorter hours. For the St. Louis World's Fair al ready $16,000,000 has been provided. Henry M.Flagler, multi-millionaire- oil aged 72, has obtained a divorce in Florida, whose legislature he owns, from his crazy old wife, in order that he may buy a young female fool with his mil lions. Lieut.-Gen. Lyttleton will succeed Lord Kitchener in South Africa. In Central America, the republics of Venezuela, Nicaragua and Ecuador are preparing to aid Gen, Uribe-Uribe in liis war against Columbia. Saturday, August 17. The battleship Iowa has been ordered to Panama aud the gunboat Bennington The Ranger leaves for the. Isthmus. Cecil Rhodes, some time ago, contrib uted 5000 to the EnglishLiberals cam paign funds. , ' Fifty British scouts were captured by the Boers. , Boring for oil will begiu in tbe eastern pari of Multnomah county. In the Damirza district of Arminia,400 Kurds destroyed 12 villages with fire and sword, saving only the young girls. 'The strike has tied up 29 deep water vessels at ban t rancisco. , 'The working iron moulders of Chi cago will, tax themselves to sup port the Btrilaers, which will produce about $2500 a week. , Before the strike l'gan, J. P. Morgan contemplated selling t. the 105,000 em ployes of ttie stui i 1 u-t stock in the concern at inside hV in es. The Alaska tran-iiortation concerns have formed a $6,000 000 combine. At Joliet, 111 , 2500 employes of the Illinois steel company joined the strikers Millionaire Mead, of New York, pro poses to catch salmon by blinding them with electricity. Lord Kitchener is moving on General Botha's 4000 Boers on the border of Zu luland. Sunday, August 18. Near Glendale, yesterday afternoon, the extra freight train broke la two I'hen the running cars violently came together. The jar exploded two cars of dynamite and wrecked the train. The explosion set the woods afire and pro duced an earthquake. No one killed. Eleven cars disappeared entirely. Charles M.Hays has resigned as pres ident of the Southern Pacific, which will be merged in the Central Pacific. Ex-Premier Ito of Japan predicts an other anti-foreign uprising in China. A force of Columbians which invaded Venezuela was driven back. The expenses of Multnomah county are $85,000 less for the first half of 1901 than for the corresponding period in 1900. A million-dollar project is on foot to irrigate 00,000 acres in Walker Basin, Crook county, 4500 above eea level. In San Francisco, Beveral hundred Fi lipinos have taken the places on ship ping of striking sailors and coal . passers. . In California, the rich employers are trying to influence public opinion in opposition to the reenactment by con gress next year of the Chinese exclusion aw, in order that they may crush union ism among unskilled labor with coolies. The harvest from America's goll mines lor this year is placed atiuu,- 000,000. In Peoria altogether 6700 are out cn the strike. The Central Carriage Co.,of Now York city, capitalized at $20,000,000, whose hares at one time sold lor f'Juu each, as passed into the hands of a receiver who was required to give only $5000 bonds. The navy department is hurrying war vessels of the first class to the isth mus of Panama in order to foreHtall any naval demonstration of England or Ger many 111 Central America with the ob ject of land piracy. Chiis. Buckley, San Francisco's "blind devil," has made an effort to break the strike by liberal oilers of bribe money to the heads of the teamsters' biotherhood. Through the whirling around and overturning of a trolle car in Chicago, 5 persons were killed and 10 injured. Venezuela has a large army on the Columbian frontier4to repel invasion. Monday, August 19. The steamer Islander struck an ice berg on Thursday, the 15th, at 2 a. m., off Douglas Island, Alaska, the fog be ing heavy, and sank, 42 persons going down with it. There was $275,000 in gold aboard, a fraction of which wa-i .saved. Captain Foote went down with the vessel. THE WEEK S. M. Felton, of the Chicago & Alton, will, it is said,- he president of the Southern Pacific. Generul McArthur has arrived atJSan Francisco from Manila. Kruger has expressed warm sympathy with the efforts of the Iriirh National ists, and unequivocally avows his dis trust of the pretty promises of the En glish government. In Portland, Alice Potter, 5 years old, died of blood poisoning caused by a sting or a microbe. . China wants radic.il changes in the terms of the treaty with Russia. France will build a railroad from Yun nan, on the gulf of Tonquin, northward towards ibibet. Kussia is credited with the scheme of attempting to secure a protectorate over Thibet, which would menace English sovereignty in Iudia. Three Belgian glass factories, with 10,000,000 francs capital, will combine. 'Germany will form a colonial army, whose soldiers may settle in the colony after the lime of service. At Tampa, Fla., the employers broke the cigarmakers' strike by taking the law in their own hands. They seized and exported the leaders and warned them not to return would they escape much worse treatment. Tuesday, August 20. Capitalists are dissatisfied with th reduced rate of income on the (i,000,- 000,000 invested in the Britiish railroads, and attribute it to had business manage ment. E. H. llarriman intends boring a rail road tunnel, 27,000 feet long, through the Sierra Nevada Mountains in Cali fornia. The strike of 1800 more men at Pitts burg bhuts down two tube mills. Near Paducah, Ky., the steamboat City of Golconda turned turtle in a storm and about 17 persons were drowned. At Seattle, 450 machinists have been on a strike for three months. At Springfield, Mo., the lynchiug of Will and French Godley, as result of the murder of Miss Uaselle Wilde, has re sulted in a race war, A mob seized the rifles in the armory and burned negroes' houees. At Kokomo, Ind.,four small bva stoned to death an older boy, lidJie McKee. In' London circles the belief is once more expressed that the lioers are about plaved out and the war is nearly over. The Boer women recently captured de clare stoutly that the burghers are go ing to win, for, shortly, the continental powers will .intervene, , Near Middleburg, Cape. Colony, the Boers and the Tommies collided. The former lost 23 me.n and the latter near ly as many. All grades of sugar dropped 10 cents per 100 pounds. . . Thoueands ot the laborers of Apulia, italy, live on nothing but the boiled roots of trees, and work for four cents a day- Wednesday, August 21. Peter Hampton was the third negro killed by the white mob at dpringfield, Mo. Intense hostility prevail' at Manila between the friars and Uk- hderalsor anti-friar native party. The Russian czar will witness the French army maneuvres. England is buying here 75,000 more horses for South Africa. An incendiary fire in Grand Bourg, French West Indies, left one-third of its population of 15,000 homeless. On the 22d, Martin Stenzel, of Jersey City, 80 years old, marries Mrs. Sophia Lehman, aged 30 years. He has had four wives and she two husbands. A steamship took 7500 tons of farm machinery from New York to Odessa. Because the sultan of Turkey lied to M. Constans, the French ambassador at Constantinople, the French govern ment has severed all diplomatic rela tions with Turkoy. The European powers still retain mili tary possession of Pekin. More than a dozen lumber companies near the Eastern Atlantic bcrder have united under the name of the Chequas set Company with $1,000,000 capital. An explosion of gas in the new water works tunnel under Lake Erie at Cleve land killed five men. Henry Dolan, of New York, who died, left $8,000,000 to Mary L. Detorrest of Kansas. Seven of the 12 Roman Catholic bish ops in the Philippines will be Americans Jack Winters, who stole $330,003 from the Selby frorks at San Francisco, gets 15 years in the i uJsom pen. . On the occasion of the nesr-by visit ot the czar to 1 ranee, a petition for la tervention iu South Africa will be pre sented to him. A considerable portion of Boer hcrses and cattle are captured several times by the British before being finally driven into camp, which explains why ttie Tommies capture so much. About ohe-tiiird the population of the two Boer republics is imprisoned in the British concentration camps. The salmon pack of the Columbia for 1891 is 337,000 caseB, value $2,573,800. Thursday, August 22. During the last 18 months, the price 01 salt has advanced 3)u per cent. The Walla Walla wheat crop will be auout 3 7ou,uuu bushels, or larger than last year. Through the capsizing of a French coistuig vessel 15 persons weie drowned The Iowa democrats nominated T, J Phillips for governor and readimed the Kansas City platform. The census bureau gives Portland as the second healthiest city in the country The great strike has aroused the fore most men in the country to an apprecia tion of the enormity of the evil. The peach crop is over 7o,0J0,000 bu. For Whooping Cough. "Both my children were taken with whooping cough," writes Mrs. O, E. Dutton, of Danville, IU. "A small bot tle of Foley's Honey and Tar curl the rough and saved me a doctor's bill." Charman & Co. - - Athens, Term., Jan. 27, 1001. Ever si--.ee tho iu-st py "- nirice of mr menses they were very Irrejrular and I suffered with great pain in my hips, back, stomach and li--a, with terrible bearing down pains hi tbe abdomen. During th? ppst, month I hav3 been taicii.-g: V iue of Cr-rtui fi';d Tnudford's Blacfc-Dran"! t, m 1 Inn- --Hho month ly period wiuiout pain K-r ine first time in years. Nannie Davis. Whal is life- worth fo a. woman suffer ing like fnnlo Davis suffered? Yet there are women i;i th:i':ands of homes lo-day who are bearirg those terrible menstrual pains in silence. If you are one of these we want to say that this same will bring you permanent relief. Con solo yoursolf with the knowlcdgo fhal 1,000,000 women have bcon complolely cured by Wino of Cardui. Those wom en suffered fcom leucorrhooa, Irregular menses, headache, backache, and bearing down pains. Wino of Cardui will stop all these aches and pains for you. Purchase a $1.00 bottla of Wine of Cardui to-day and take it In the privacy ol your home. For advice atidlltprnuire, address. Klvlnpsymp toins, "Tilt) Lumps' Advisory huvui'lmeiit," The Chattanooga Aledicliie Co., Chattanooga, leim. September Smart St. The September number of The Smart Set fully sustains the reputation of that fascinating magtzine for vivacity and cleverness. It opens with an amusing , roveltte by Caroline Duer, entitled "A New Bonnet for Mary." The adven tures of the ingenious and unconven-. tional heroine, a society heiress, are diverting to a degree. Mrs. M, E. W. Sherwood writes entertainingly on the subject of divorce under the title of "Untying the Knot.'' Mrs. Flora Bigelow Dodge, a sister of Poultney Bigelow, is the author of a brilliant and hnrrnrnns society satire' entitled Mrs. i ... .V Example," while Edgar Baltu- e-atmiliHr of his pyr otechnic ess 1 niiitleit "The Pomps of Satan." Om- ui li e Mn ngest Blories in the ntimbei ;s "Tne V 1 of Honor," by Lloyd O-borne, and Prince Vladimir Vaniatsky rontribuU-H a strange tale called "The Queen of the Fur Country," Other features of this attractive issive are! "Underbrush, a mystery of the woods by Julien Gordi.n (Mrs Van Rensselaer Cruger) ; "His Prophylactic Flirtation " tho wooing of a delightful ' duchess, by Guy Somerville; "The Transmogrification of Dan," a Sun Fran cisco story, by II. J. W, Dam; Brocton" Mott, Kealist, a ?1()0 prize story, by 1 Kate Jordan; "The Companion to Vir tue," by Gertrude F. Lynch; and "The Picture Over the Man ei," nn idyllic love story of Paris, by Justus Miles Foj man.' ' .1 NERVE WASTE." One of the most helpful books on nerve . weakness ever issued is that entitled ( Nerve Waste," by Dr. Sawyer, of ij.in i Francisco, now In its fifth thousand. This work of an experienced and repu table physician is in agreeable contrast to the vast sum ol talse teaching which prevails on this interesting subject.. It abounds- in carefully considered and practically advice, and has the two great , merits ot wisdom and sincerity. It is indorsed by both the religious and secular press. The Chicago Ad vance says: "A perusal of the book aud the application of its principles will put health, hope and heart into thousands of lives that are now suffering through nervous impairment. The book is $ 1.00, by mail, postpaid. One of the most interesting chanters chapters xx, on Nervines and Nerve Tonics has beeu printed separately as a sample chapter, and will be sent to any address for stamp by the publishers, The Tactile Pub. vo uox. 'MM, ban Francisco in plain sealed envelope. For Over l irty Years. An Ou and Wkll-Thikd Rkmkdv. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used' for over fifty years by millions ' of mothers for their children while; teething, with perfect success. It soothes tbe child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and in j the best remedy for Diarrhoea. la ' pleasant to the taste, Sold Ly Drug-! gists in every part of the World, j Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is! incalculable. I'e sure and ask lor Mrs. ! Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take noi other kind. MITCHELL WAGONS Best possible to build. No waiion is or can be Letter than a Mitchell, because the cream of wood stock is used, only after being thoroughly seasoned. Tim wagon is well ironed, well painted, well propor tioned, and runs the light-st of any. It is narly 70 years since the first lilchell waifon was built, and they have been built continuously ever since by the Mitchells. When yon buy a Mitchell, you get the benefit of this 70 years' experience. MifcInlJ, Lewis & Staver Co. First and Portland, Taylor Streets Oregon,